Data from: Fitness costs of animal medication: anti-parasitic plant chemicals reduce fitness of monarch butterfly hosts
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The emerging field of ecological immunology demonstrates that allocation by hosts to immune defense against parasites is constrained by the costs of those defenses. However, the costs of non-immunological defenses, which are important alternatives to canonical immune systems, are less well characterized. Estimating such costs is essential for our understanding of the ecology and evolution of alternative host defense strategies. Many animals have evolved medication behaviors, whereby they use anti-parasitic compounds from their environment to protect themselves or their kin from parasitism. Documenting the costs of medication behaviors is complicated by natural variation in the medicinal components of diets and their covariance with other dietary components, such as macronutrients. In the current study, we explore costs of the usage of anti-parasitic compounds in monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus), using natural variation in concentrations of anti-parasitic compounds among plants. Upon infection by their specialist protozoan parasite Ophryocystis elektroscirrha, monarch butterflies can selectively oviposit on milkweed with high foliar concentrations of cardenolides, secondary chemicals that reduce parasite growth. Here, we show that these anti-parasitic cardenolides can also impose significant costs on both uninfected and infected butterflies. Among eight milkweed species that vary substantially in their foliar cardenolide concentration and composition, we observed opposing effects of cardenolides on monarch fitness traits. While high foliar cardenolide concentrations increased the tolerance of monarch butterflies to infection, they reduced the survival rate of caterpillars to adulthood. Additionally, although nonpolar cardenolide compounds decreased the spore load of infected butterflies, they also reduced the life span of uninfected butterflies, resulting in a hump-shaped curve between cardenolide non-polarity and the life span of infected butterflies.
创建时间:
2016-06-16



